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Latest Articles: Science/Tech

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Crashing passenger jet with Android phone?
Post Date: 2013-04-12 05:49:25 by Tatarewicz
0 Comments
Reuters: There’s now another reason to be aerophobic after a German hacker demonstrated how to remotely hijack and bring down an airplane using an app for the Android phone. The presentation called ‘Aircraft Hacking: Practical Aero Series' by Hugo Teso has become the highlight of the Hack In The Box security conference in Amsterdam on April 10-11, terrifying most of those, who attended it. Teso, who currently works as a security consultant at the German n.runs IT-company, has used his experience of being a commercial pilot to create the software, which grants him full control of a passenger aircraft. It took the researcher three years to come up with the PlaneSploit app for ...

Iranian scientist claims to have invented 'time machine'
Post Date: 2013-04-12 04:59:11 by Tatarewicz
2 Comments
An Iranian businessman claims to have mastered time with a machine that allows users to fast forward up to eight years into the future. Ali Razeghi, a Tehran scientist has registered "The Aryayek Time Traveling Machine" with the state-run Centre for Strategic Inventions. The device can predict the future in a print out after taking readings from the touch of a user, he told the Fars state newsagency. Razaeghi, 27, said the device worked by a set of complex algorithims to "predict five to eight years of the future life of any individual, with 98 percent accuracy". As the managing director of Iran's Centre for Strategic Inventions, Razeghi is a serial inventor ...

5 Worst Tech Rip-offs
Post Date: 2013-04-11 06:37:49 by Tatarewicz
6 Comments
Yahoo News: When you’re about to buy a new gadget or computer, you have to make a ton of decisions – decisions that could end up costing you way too much. So what are the worst tech rip-offs – and how can you avoid them? Rip-off #1: Buying from the Carrier Buying a new phone poses lots of questions – starting with: where should you get your new device? The cell service providers would love you to believe that if you buy from them, you’ll get an amazing package deal. They’d also love you to believe that you HAVE to get your phone from them. You don’t. As long as the type of phone is supported by the service provider you choose, you can often save a ...

Male baldness linked to risk of coronary heart disease, research claims
Post Date: 2013-04-05 17:49:02 by X-15
1 Comments
Bald men are at greater risk of developing heart problems than those who retain a full head of hair – but only those with hair loss on top of their heads, and not at the front, are affected, new research suggests. While baldness is associated with an increased risk of coronary heart disease (CHD), men who have a receding hairline are not at heightened risk of the condition, according to a study in the journal BMJ Open. Researchers in Japan who examined six previous studies from Europe and America of the link between baldness and CHD, comprising 36,990 men, found that five of the studies confirmed an association. Men who have lost most of their hair are 32% more likely to go on to ...

Online Learning: It's Different
Post Date: 2013-04-05 04:33:18 by Tatarewicz
0 Comments
Science Daily Apr. 4, 2013 — The number of online educational offerings has exploded in recent years, but their rapid rise has spawned a critical question: Can such "virtual" classes cut through the maze of distractions -- such as email, the Internet, and television -- that face students sitting at their computers? The solution, Harvard researchers say, is to test students early and often. By interspersing online lectures with short tests, student mind-wandering decreased by half, note-taking tripled, and overall retention of the material improved, according to Daniel Schacter, the William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of Psychology, and Karl Szpunar, a postdoctoral fellow in ...

Picking Apart Photosynthesis: New Insights Could Lead to Better Catalysts for Water Splitting
Post Date: 2013-04-01 05:29:30 by Tatarewicz
2 Comments
Science Daily: Mar. 28, 2013 — Chemists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory believe they can now explain one of the remaining mysteries of photosynthesis, the chemical process by which plants convert sunlight into usable energy and generate the oxygen that we breathe. The finding suggests a new way of approaching the design of catalysts that drive the water-splitting reactions of artificial photosynthesis. "If we want to make systems that can do artificial photosynthesis, it's important that we understand how the system found in nature functions," says Theodor Agapie, an assistant professor of chemistry at ...

Animation of Hydraulic Fracturing (fracking)
Post Date: 2013-03-29 23:27:59 by lead.and.lag
1 Comments
. www.youtube.com/watch?v=VY34PQUiwOQ .

Study: Archeologists find remains of human-Neanderthal hybrid
Post Date: 2013-03-29 08:57:03 by Ada
17 Comments
Researchers believe they have pinpointed the skeletal remains of the first known human-Neanderthal hybrid, according to a study published Wednesday in the peer reviewed scientific journal PLoS ONE. The finding comes from northern Italy, where some 40,000 years ago scientists believe Neanderthals and humans lived near each other, but developed separate and distinctly different cultures. A portion of a jawbone found during an archaeological dig in the area reveals that the bone’s owner had facial features attributable to both modern humans and Neanderthals, the study explains. Scientists have debated the theory of human-Neanderthal interbreeding since DNA analysis revealed in 2010 ...

Theory of Everything: God, Devils, Dimensions & Illusion of Reality
Post Date: 2013-03-27 05:57:00 by noone222
9 Comments
Poster Comment:Fascinating - is an understatement - life and our reality are a 100 trillion to one longshot !

New research shows that the speed of light may not be fixed after all, but rather fluctuates.
Post Date: 2013-03-25 21:25:48 by farmfriend
0 Comments
Ephemeral vacuum particles induce speed-of-light fluctuations March 25, 2013 New research shows that the speed of light may not be fixed after all, but rather fluctuates. Two forthcoming European Physical Journal D papers challenge established wisdom about the nature of vacuum. In one paper, Marcel Urban from the University of Paris-Sud, located in Orsay, France and his colleagues identified a quantum level mechanism for interpreting vacuum as being filled with pairs of virtual particles with fluctuating energy values. As a result, the inherent characteristics of vacuum, like the speed of light, may not be a constant after all, but fluctuate. Meanwhile, in another study, Gerd Leuchs and ...

How The Internet Works
Post Date: 2013-03-25 11:12:14 by christine
6 Comments
www.wimp.com/internetworks/ 3 minute vid

Algae façade makes house truly 'green'
Post Date: 2013-03-25 02:28:28 by Tatarewicz
0 Comments
For many of us, the concept of living in a place with stuff growing on its walls won’t necessarily be foreign. What will be unusual for those who have experienced the joys of residing in damp student flats and first homes away from the parental nest, however, is the idea that microorganisms flourishing on your walls is a good thing. This is precisely the logic at work in the construction of a state-of-the-art apartment building in the once rundown, but increasingly trendy riverside quarter of Wilhelmsburg in Hamburg. Clad on its two south-facing sides with a transparent shell housing millions of microalgae, the five-storey Bio Intelligence Quotient (BIQ) house has been designed to ...

New (to me) Information Gathering Site
Post Date: 2013-03-22 08:54:55 by Lod
1 Comments
A most interesting site and company.

Wal-Mart rolling out smartphone checkouts at 200 stores
Post Date: 2013-03-21 11:39:30 by Artisan
12 Comments
Wal-Mart shoppers will be able bypass the traditional checkout process at more than 200 stores with the Scan & Go app, but they still must pay the old-fashioned way. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. said it is tripling the number of U.S. stores in a pilot program that lets shoppers scan items with their iPhones and pay at self-checkout counters. Wal-Mart's Scan & Go program will soon be in more than 200 stores, up from about 70. The pilot began near its home office in Bentonville, Ark., in late 2012, then expanded to Atlanta. While the program is tripling in size, for now it will be in only a small fraction of Wal-Mart's more than 4,000 U.S. stores. Walmart expanding iPhone-based ...

The Great Green Con no. 1: The hard proof that finally shows global warming forecasts that are costing you billions were WRONG all along
Post Date: 2013-03-21 07:47:57 by Ada
3 Comments
No, the world ISN'T getting warmer (as you may have noticed). Now we reveal the official data that's making scientists suddenly change their minds about climate doom. So will eco-funded MPs stop waging a green crusade with your money? Well... what do YOU think? The Mail on Sunday today presents irrefutable evidence that official predictions of global climate warming have been catastrophically flawed. The graph on this page blows apart the ‘scientific basis’ for Britain reshaping its entire economy and spending billions in taxes and subsidies in order to cut emissions of greenhouse gases. These moves have already added £100 a year to household energy bills. Read ...

'Alien' Skulls Found At Sonora, Mexico, Ancient Burial Site (PHOTO, VIDEO)
Post Date: 2013-03-20 00:09:01 by farmfriend
4 Comments
'Alien' Skulls Found At Sonora, Mexico, Ancient Burial Site (PHOTO, VIDEO) The Huffington Post | By Ryan Grenoble An ancient burial site in Mexico, discovered in 1999 but only recently investigated, has revealed skeletal remains with odd, "alien-shaped" skulls. They were unearthed in the northwestern Mexican state of Sonora at a site known as "El Cementerio" when workers stumbled upon the remains accidentally while digging to install an irrigation system. According to Time, the bones date to between A.D. 940 and 1308, making them around 1,000 years old. The skulls appear to have been intentionally deformed until they resembled something akin to the ...

So You Don’t Believe in Chemtrails?
Post Date: 2013-03-19 22:02:55 by Southern Style
23 Comments
So You Don’t Believe in Chemtrails?by ishtarsgate by Vincent Andersen © 2013 That’s fine. Neither do most people….who don’t have to live under them. But chemtrails are not just something you believe in, like some believe that there will be 75 nubile virgins waiting for them in Heaven if they just kill a few infidels. There’s no documentary evidence for that. But there is documentary evidence for the existence of chemtrails which is overwhelming and inescapably conclusive, and so here’s just a taster for some of it. The chemtrail programme that we see today began in earnest in the 90s. However the technology has existed for a lot longer and there are ...

The Holocaust Just Got More Shocking (42,500 more camps! 20 million new victims!)
Post Date: 2013-03-17 10:09:46 by Artisan
7 Comments
THIRTEEN years ago, researchers at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum began the grim task of documenting all the ghettos, slave labor sites, concentration camps and killing factories that the Nazis set up throughout Europe. What they have found so far has shocked even scholars steeped in the history of the Holocaust. The researchers have cataloged some 42,500 Nazi ghettos and camps throughout Europe, spanning German-controlled areas from France to Russia and Germany itself, during Hitler’s reign of brutality from 1933 to 1945. The figure is so staggering that even fellow Holocaust scholars had to make sure they had heard it correctly when the lead researchers previewed ...

Miracle grow: Indian farmers smash crop yield records without GMOs
Post Date: 2013-03-16 21:06:49 by Original_Intent
4 Comments
Miracle grow: Indian farmers smash crop yield records without GMOs By Tom Laskawy F. Fiondella / IRA, CCAFSGorita, Andhra Pradesh, India. What if the agricultural revolution has already happened and we didn’t realize it? Essentially, that’s the idea in this report from the Guardian about a group of poverty-stricken Indian rice and potato farmers who harvested confirmed world-record yields of rice and potatoes. Best of all: They did it completely sans-GMOs or even chemicals of any kind. [Sumant] Kumar, a shy young farmer in Nalanda district of India’s poorest state Bihar, had — using only farmyard manure and without any herbicides — grown an astonishing 22.4 ...

Pentagon weapons-maker finds method for cheap, clean water
Post Date: 2013-03-13 08:43:27 by Tatarewicz
0 Comments
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A defense contractor better known for building jet fighters and lethal missiles says it has found a way to slash the amount of energy needed to remove salt from seawater, potentially making it vastly cheaper to produce clean water at a time when scarcity has become a global security issue. The process, officials and engineers at Lockheed Martin Corp say, would enable filter manufacturers to produce thin carbon membranes with regular holes about a nanometer in size that are large enough to allow water to pass through but small enough to block the molecules of salt in seawater. A nanometer is a billionth of a meter. Because the sheets of pure carbon known as ...

Detecting Cesium With Naked Eyes
Post Date: 2013-03-13 07:55:55 by Tatarewicz
0 Comments
Mar. 5, 2013 — Micrometer-level naked-eye detection of cesium ions, a major source of contamination in the vicinity of radioactive leaks, is demonstrated in a material developed by researchers in Japan. Radioactive cesium 137 has a half-life of 30.17 years, and its accumulation in organisms in exposed regions, such as around the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, amplifies the hazard it poses. A new material reported by researchers in Japan may help. "We have developed molecular materials as an optical probe for cesium cation-containing particles with implementation based on simple spray-on reagents and a commonly available fluorescent lamp for naked-eye detection in the solid ...

Why Public WiFi Hotspots Are Trouble Spots for Users
Post Date: 2013-03-11 14:51:10 by Original_Intent
12 Comments
Why Public WiFi Hotspots Are Trouble Spots for Users Posted on March 11, 2013 by Angel - NYC AOL – by Private WiFi Take a look around any coffee shop, airport, hotel or library, and you’ll quickly notice that Public WiFi hotpots have become the rule, not the exception. See all those people tapping away on their smart phone, tablet or laptop in a one-man/woman quest to check their email, pay their bills, tweet, update their status and so on? They’re your proof. In 2011, the number of WiFi hotspots reached 1.3 million worldwide. By 2015, WiFi users will be able to connect to 5.8 million hotspots, according to a report commissioned by the Wireless Broadband Alliance. The fact ...

Cree’s LED bulb looks like an incandescent and lights like one, for under $10
Post Date: 2013-03-11 14:02:27 by Original_Intent
15 Comments
Cree’s LED bulb looks like an incandescent and lights like one, for under $10 Mar. 5, 2013 (6:00 am) By: Sal Cangeloso Today Cree, the North Carolina-based LED manufacturer, is making a move that will have major implications for the LED lighting industry. The company, which is known for its high-quality LEDs and its lighting fixtures, has announced a line of LED bulbs, marking the first time it will offer the A-style replacement bulb that lights most homes. This will put Cree in competition against giants like Philips and GE, as well as directly up against companies that buy Cree LEDs, like Best Buy. While Cree offering bulbs is big news for LED insiders, today’s ...

Psychiatric Meds: Prescription for Murder?
Post Date: 2013-03-08 09:15:59 by Ada
1 Comments
In a frenzied cry for gun-control, the media is rife with details about the firearms Adam Lanza used to kill 20 children and six adults before turning a handgun on himself at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, on December 14, 2012. But information about Lanza’s medical history is scarce, feeding speculation that he may fit the profile of school shooters under the influence of psychotherapeutic medication. “In virtually every mass school shooting during the past 15 years, the shooter has been on or in withdrawal from psychiatric drugs,” observed Lawrence Hunter of the Social Security Institute. “Yet, federal and state governments continue to ignore ...

Brain Can't Cope With Making a Left-Hand Turn and Talking On Hands-Free Cell Phone
Post Date: 2013-03-04 07:38:13 by Tatarewicz
0 Comments
Science News: Feb. 28, 2013 — Most serious traffic accidents occur when drivers are making a left-hand turn at a busy intersection. When those drivers are also talking on a hands-free cell phone, "that could be the most dangerous thing they ever do on the road," said Dr. Tom Schweizer, a researcher at St. Michael's Hospital. Researchers led by Dr. Schweizer tested healthy young drivers operating a novel driving simulator equipped with a steering wheel, brake pedal and accelerator inside a high-powered functional MRI. All previous studies on distracted driving have used just a joy-stick or trackball or else patients passively watching scenarios on a screen. Immersing a ...

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